Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Cleaning - Combination Wet and Dry Coal-cleaning Process (With Discussion)By Ray W. Arms
The combination wet and dry coal-cleaning process is not an attempt at a compromise between the wets and the drys nor is its merit confined entirely to the limitation of moisture in the smaller sizes.
Jan 1, 1931
-
Ventilation Of The Liberty Tunnels At PittsburghBy Louis Huber
THE Liberty tunnels extend through a very steep hill in Pittsburgh (locally called Mount Washington) for a distance of slightly over a mile. The two tunnels parallel each other and are 59 ft. apart, c
Jan 1, 1927
-
Big Hole Drilling, A Study In DepthBy Thomas B. Dellinger
Since 1950, rotary-drilled, large-diameter holes, "big holes", with depths to over 300 ft and diameters of over 30 in., have become numerous and widespread. 50 such holes have been drilled for access
Jan 12, 1965
-
The Selection And Use Of Drill SteelBy Charles M. Cooley
THE continual improvements in. the two extremes of the drilling, unit, the drill and bit, have prompted critical examination of the drill steel, the weak link of this drilling unit. Obviously, little
Jan 1, 1952
-
Beneficiation of Spodumene Rock by Froth FlotationBy James Norman
SPODUMENE is a lithium-bearing pyroxene, and is an important source of lithium compounds. Because of its high alumina and lithia content it might be a desirable constituent of glass batches. The use o
Jan 1, 1940
-
Wilkes-Barre Paper - History and Geology of Ancient Gold-Fields in TurkeyBy Leon Dominian
The lack of Aryan roots for the names of metals commonly known among the Aryan settlers of Asia Minor, as well as the later colonizers of Europe, indicates that these races were generally ignorant of
Jan 1, 1912
-
Fine Particle FlotationBy D. W. Fuerstenau
In recent years, various advances have taken place in the flotation recovery of fine mineral particles. A number of new approaches to recovery of fine particles have been proposed. In this paper, the
Jan 1, 1980
-
Point Load Testing Of Brittle Materials To Determine Tensile Strength And Relative BrittlenessBy Donald R. Reichmuth
Most brittle solids are relatively weak in tension and this weakness can be very significant in determining their performance in structures and excavations. Consequently, accurate knowledge of the ten
Jan 1, 1968
-
Technology and Performance of the Hi-Capacity ThickenerBy R. C. Emmett, R. P. Klepper
The industrial practice of concentration of solids and production of clear solution by gravity sedimentation is an old technology. Through the years, many devices have been designed and built to aid t
Jan 1, 1981
-
New York Paper - Temperature Measurements in Bessemer and Open-Hearth Practice (with Discussion)By George K. Burgess
The suggestion has often been made that it would be highly desirable, at least for certain grades of steel, to be able to control more certainly, by pyrometric measurement or otherwise, the temperatur
Jan 1, 1917
-
Papers - Education - Education and Training Economic Geologists of the Future (Mining Tech., Nov. 1947, T.P.2278, with discussion)By Charles H. Behre
This paper discusses education and training for economic geologists other than petroleum geologists. Candidates enter economic geology through liberal arts colleges, engineering schools and university
Jan 1, 1949
-
Papers - Education - Education and Training Economic Geologists of the Future (Mining Tech., Nov. 1947, T.P.2278, with discussion)By Charles H. Behre
This paper discusses education and training for economic geologists other than petroleum geologists. Candidates enter economic geology through liberal arts colleges, engineering schools and university
Jan 1, 1949
-
Part V – May 1968 - Papers - The Densities of Some Liquid Lead-Antimony and Lead-Antimony-Tin AlloysBy A. F. Crawley
The densities of some liquid Pb-Sb alloys up to 11 wt pct Sb and Pb-Sb-& alloys up to 10 pct Sb/10 pct Sh have been determined by a pycnometric technique over a temperature range of about 130°C above
Jan 1, 1969
-
Ottawa Paper - The Treatment of Fine Gold in the band; of snake River, IdahoBy Thos Egleston
The sands of Snake River, Idaho, have long been known to contain gold. They were worked by some of the first prospectors who came to Idaho, and on the banks still stand the ruins of camps abandoned fo
Jan 1, 1890
-
Papers - - Production Engineering and Engineering Research - Some Factors Affecting Viscosity of Rotary MudsBy W. H. Burke
Deeper drilling, resulting in greater circulating distance and pressure, has directed attention to the advantages of the study of properties and control of rotary muds, which until recently have not h
Jan 1, 1935
-
Comparison of Copper Wire Bars Cast Vertically and HorizontallyBy J. Walter Scott
IT is usual practice in the copper industry to use open horizontal molds for casting tough-pitch copper wire bars.1 A wire bar cast in this manner is partly characterized, by heavy wrinkles and a comp
Jan 1, 1930
-
New York Paper - Determination of Dissolved Oxygen in Cyanide Solutions (with Discussion)By Max W. Bowen, A. J. Weinig
The important part that dissolved oxygen plays in the cyanide treatment of gold and silver ores is commonly recognized by most metallurgists and mill men. But heretofore there has been no simple metho
Jan 1, 1925
-
Coal Preparation With the Modern Feldspar JigBy G. A. Vissac
In continental Europe the feldspar jig is used almost exclusively for cleaning the fine sizes of coal; it operates with an artificial bed, made up generally of pieces of feldspar or of any other hard
Jul 1, 1955
-
Production of Self-Fluxing Pellets in the Laboratory and Pilot PlantBy K. E. Merklin, F. D. DeVaney
Students of the modern blast furnace seem unanimously agreed that they are observing a major revolution in practice. Rather than changing construction and operation of the furnaces, most of the great
Jan 3, 1960
-
Distribution of Uranium in Granitic Rocks - Implications of Saturation Limits for Trace Minerals (AIME Vol. 274)By E. C. Simmons
Uranium is an incompatible element with respect to the major rock-forming minerals crystallizing from granitic magma, entering instead trace minerals such as zircon. The relationship between the satur
Jan 1, 1984